Page:Eugene Aram vol 3 - Lytton (1832).djvu/165

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EUGENE ARAM.
157

about so soon to pass. Yet he,—the hermit of Nature, who—

———"Each little herb
That grows on mountain bleak, or tangled forest,
Had learnt to name;"[1]

he could not feel, even through the bars and checks of a prison, the soft summer air, 'the witchery of the soft blue sky;' he could not see the leaves bud forth, and mellow into their darker verdure; he could not hear the songs of the many-voiced birds, or listen to the dancing rain, calling up beauty where it fell; or mark at night, through his high and narrow casement, the stars aloof, and the sweet moon pouring in her light, like God's pardon, even through the dungeon-gloom and the desolate scenes where Mortality struggles with Despair; he could not catch, obstructed as they were, these, the benigner influences of earth, and not sicken and pant for his old and full communion with their ministry and presence. Sometimes all around him was forgotten, the harsh cell, the cheerless

  1. Remorse, by S. T. Coleridge.